Menu

Blog

Page 5199

Jan 4, 2022

SpaceX Starship prototype completes fourth static fire

Posted by in category: space travel

Source: Teslarati Date Published: 01/03/2022.

Jan 4, 2022

Western Australia’s Solar SPS Push Continues

Posted by in categories: government, solar power, sustainability

Government-funded solar panel based standalone power system installations in WA’s Esperance region completed, with more on the way.

Jan 4, 2022

This ground-breaking water jet could jump-start the electric boats revolution

Posted by in category: computing

Italian start-up Sealence is promising dramatic gains in the speed and range of electric boats thanks to a radical new pod-shaped waterjet, reports Hugo Andreae.


Gobbo first proposed the idea back in 2007, using computer simulations to test its potential, before developing the first working prototype in 2010. However, it wasn’t until the arrival of Professor Ernesto Benini, an expert in fluid dynamics from the University of Padua, that its full potential started to be realised in 2016.

The team behind the project now comprises 21 different specialists including engineers, designers, hydrodynamicists and even a powerboat racer, who together form the parent company Sealence.

Continue reading “This ground-breaking water jet could jump-start the electric boats revolution” »

Jan 4, 2022

How Elon Musk Learnt To Succeed. Just Two Rules For Learning Faster

Posted by in categories: Elon Musk, robotics/AI

Do you collect facts or nurture knowledge?

From SpaceX & Tesla, to Neuralink, OpenAI and The Boring Company, Elon Musk has demonstrated the ability to optimise the learning process, and it all comes down to two simple rules.

Continue reading “How Elon Musk Learnt To Succeed. Just Two Rules For Learning Faster” »

Jan 4, 2022

This Microsoft Model Excels at Common Sense Reasoning

Posted by in category: futurism

KEAR is a clever architecture to extend transformer models with common sense reasoning.

Jan 4, 2022

Converting trash to valuable graphene in a flash

Posted by in category: materials

Circa 2020


Flash heating of carbon-rich wastes creates graphene, which has many commercial uses.

Continue reading “Converting trash to valuable graphene in a flash” »

Jan 4, 2022

A “talking” cat is giving scientists insight into how felines think

Posted by in category: education

Cats are being taught to communicate using a button-word system. Scientists are listening closely.

Jan 4, 2022

Chemists find new way to break down old tires into material for new ones

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, health

Circa 2020


A team of chemists at McMaster University has discovered an innovative way to break down and dissolve the rubber used in automobile tires, a process which could lead to new recycling methods that have so far proven to be expensive, difficult and largely inefficient.

Continue reading “Chemists find new way to break down old tires into material for new ones” »

Jan 4, 2022

Self‐healing crystal voids in double perovskite nanocrystal

Posted by in categories: mobile phones, robotics/AI, satellites, solar power, sustainability

From the Terminator to Spiderman’s suit, self-repairing robots and devices abound in sci-fi movies. In reality, though, wear and tear reduce the effectiveness of electronic devices until they need to be replaced. What is the cracked screen of your mobile phone healing itself overnight, or the solar panels providing energy to satellites continually repairing the damage caused by micro-meteorites?

Jan 4, 2022

Old Martiki mine in Kentucky to be turned into a 200MW solar farm

Posted by in categories: solar power, sustainability

The renewable energy firm Savion is building the 200 megawatts Martin County Solar Project on a former coal mine on the border of Kentucky and West Virginia.

The solar energy generation facility will be located on approximately 1,200 acres on the old Martiki mine site in Martin County, interconnecting with Kentucky Power’s 138-kilovolt Inez Substation. The old Martiki coal mine is an abandoned mountain-top strip mine that was shut down in the 1990s. When completed, the project will produce enough energy to power the equivalent of more than 33,000 Kentucky homes.

The Martin County project that includes up to a $231 million investment recently cleared its last regulatory hurdle. It may be the biggest utility-scale coal-to-solar project in the country. The coal mine in Kentucky was one of the roughly 130,000 such sites that the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) had earmarked for renewable energy projects.